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Featured researches published by Silvana Cacace.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2012

Acetaldehyde Oral Self‐Administration: Evidence from the Operant‐Conflict Paradigm

Silvana Cacace; Fulvio Plescia; Ignazio Barberi; Carla Cannizzaro

BACKGROUND Acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanols first metabolite, has been reported to interact with the dopaminergic reward system, and with the neural circuits involved in stress response. Rats self-administer ACD directly into cerebral ventricles, and multiple intracerebroventricular infusions of ACD produce conditioned place preference. Self-administration has been largely employed to assess the reinforcing and addictive properties of most drugs of abuse. In particular, operant conditioning is a valid model to investigate drug-seeking and drug-taking behavior in rats. METHODS This study was aimed at the evaluation of (i) the motivational properties of oral ACD in the induction and maintenance of an operant-drinking behavior; (ii) ACD effect in a conflict situation employing the punishment-based Geller-Seifter procedure; and (iii) the onset of a relapse drinking behavior, following ACD deprivation. The lever-pressing procedure in a sound-attenuated operant-conditioning chamber was scheduled into 3 different periods: (i) training-rewarded responses with a fixed ratio 1; (ii) conflict-rewarded responses periodically associated with a 0.2 mA foot-shock; and (iii) relapse-rewarded lever presses following 1-week ACD abstinence. RESULTS Our results show that oral self-administrated ACD induced: a higher rate of punished responses in Geller-Seifter procedures; and the establishment of a relapse behavior following ACD deprivation. CONCLUSIONS In conclusion, our results indicate that ACD is able to induce an operant-drinking behavior, which is also maintained besides the conflict procedure and enhanced by the deprivation effect, supporting the hypothesis that ACD itself possesses motivational properties, such as alcohol and other substances of abuse.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2010

Ethanol Modulates Corticotropin Releasing Hormone Release From the Rat Hypothalamus: Does Acetaldehyde Play a Role?

Carla Cannizzaro; Marco Barbera; Fulvio Plescia; Silvana Cacace; Giuseppe Tringali

BACKGROUND AND METHODS Ethanol (EtOH) activates hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, resulting in adrenocorticotropin hormone, glucocorticoid release, and in modifications of the response of the axis to other stressors. The initial site of EtOH action within the HPA system seems to be the hypothalamus. Thus, to determine the mechanisms responsible for these effects, we investigated: (i) whether EtOH was able to release corticotrophic releasing hormone (CRH) from incubated hypothalamic explants; (ii) whether acetaldehyde (ACD), its first metabolite formed in the brain by catalase activity, might play a role in EtOH activity. To this aim, rat hypothalamic explants were incubated with: (i) medium containing EtOH at 32.6 x 10(3) microM; (ii) different concentration of ACD (1, 3, 10, and 30 microM); (iii) EtOH plus 3amino-1,2,4-triazole (3AT, 32 x 10(3) microM) an inhibitor of cerebral catalase; (iv) ACD plus D-penicillamine (DP, 50.3 x 10(3) microM) an ACD-trapping agent. CRH levels were evaluated by a radioimmunoassay. RESULTS Incubation with EtOH induced a 7-fold increase in CRH secretion, with respect to basal levels; ACD was able to stimulate CRH release in a dose-dependent manner; the inhibition of cerebral catalase by 3AT blocked EtOH-induced CRH outflow; the inactivation of ACD by DP reverted the ACD-stimulating effect on CRH secretion. CONCLUSIONS These data show that both EtOH and acetaldehyde are able to increase hypothalamic CRH release from the rat hypothalamus and that acetaldehyde itself appears to be the mediator of EtOH activity.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2011

Evaluation of chronic alcohol self-administration by a 3-bottle choice paradigm in adult male rats. Effects on behavioural reactivity, spatial learning and reference memory.

Silvana Cacace; Fulvio Plescia; Marco Barbera; Carla Cannizzaro

Chronic ethanol consumption is able to modify emotional behaviour and cognition in humans. In particular, the effects exerted by alcohol may depend on doses, time and modalities of administration. In this study we investigated, in adult male rats, ethanol self-administration and preference patterns using a 3-bottle choice paradigm with water, 10% ethanol solution, and white wine (10%, v/v), along a four-week period. The influence of alcohol free-access on novelty-induced explorative behaviour in the open field, and on spatial learning and reference memory in the Morris water maze was also evaluated. Our results indicate that: (i) rats show a higher preference for alcohol, in the first two weeks of the paradigm, displaying a higher consumption of 10% ethanol solution than white wine; in the last two weeks, they reduce their alcoholic preference, drinking the same moderate amounts of the two alcoholic beverages; (ii) at the fourth week of the free-access paradigm rats show a high explorative behaviour in the central squares of the open field and an improvement in spatial information processing in the new-place learning task of the Morris water maze. In conclusion our data suggest that, interestingly, rats exposed to the free-access paradigm were able to self-regulate their alcoholic intake, and indicated that a moderate alcohol consumption was able to induce an increase in behavioural reactivity and an enhancement in spatial learning flexibility.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2014

Pregnenolone sulphate enhances spatial orientation and object discrimination in adult male rats: Evidence from a behavioural and electrophysiological study

Fulvio Plescia; Pierangelo Sardo; Valerio Rizzo; Silvana Cacace; Rosa Anna Maria Marino; Anna Brancato; Giuseppe Ferraro; Fabio Carletti; Carla Cannizzaro

Neurosteroids can alter neuronal excitability interacting with specific neurotransmitter receptors, thus affecting several functions such as cognition and emotionality. In this study we investigated, in adult male rats, the effects of the acute administration of pregnenolone-sulfate (PREGS) (10mg/kg, s.c.) on cognitive processes using the Can test, a non aversive spatial/visual task which allows the assessment of both spatial orientation-acquisition and object discrimination in a simple and in a complex version of the visual task. Electrophysiological recordings were also performed in vivo, after acute PREGS systemic administration in order to investigate on the neuronal activation in the hippocampus and the perirhinal cortex. Our results indicate that, PREGS induces an improvement in spatial orientation-acquisition and in object discrimination in the simple and in the complex visual task; the behavioural responses were also confirmed by electrophysiological recordings showing a potentiation in the neuronal activity of the hippocampus and the perirhinal cortex. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that PREGS systemic administration in rats exerts cognitive enhancing properties which involve both the acquisition and utilization of spatial information, and object discrimination memory, and also correlates the behavioural potentiation observed to an increase in the neuronal firing of discrete cerebral areas critical for spatial learning and object recognition. This provides further evidence in support of the role of PREGS in exerting a protective and enhancing role on human memory.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2012

Alcohol preference, behavioural reactivity and cognitive functioning in female rats exposed to a three-bottle choice paradigm

Silvana Cacace; Fulvio Plescia; Pierangelo Sardo; Carla Cannizzaro

Alcohol abuse is a substantial and growing health problem in Western societies. In the last years in vivo and in vitro studies have suggested that males and females display a different alcohol drinking behaviour, with swingeing differences not only in the propensity for alcohol use but also in the metabolic and behavioural consequences. In this study we investigated, in adult female rats, ethanol self-administration and preference pattern using a 3-bottle paradigm with water, 10% ethanol solution, and white wine (10%, v/v), along a four-week period. The influence of alcohol free-access on explorative behaviour in the open field (OF), and on spatial learning and reference memory in the Morris water maze (MWM) were also evaluated. Our results indicate that: (i) female rats show a higher preference for alcohol, in the first two weeks of the paradigm, displaying a higher consumption of 10% ethanol solution than white wine; in the last two weeks, they reduce their alcoholic preference, drinking the same moderate amounts of the two alcoholic beverages; (ii) at the fourth week of the free-access paradigm rats show a lower explorative behaviour in the open field and a worsening in spatial memory retention in the Morris water maze. In conclusion our data suggest that, despite the ability to self-regulate alcohol intake, female rats suffer from relevant impairments in spatial memory retention and cognitive flexibility, displaying a sexually dimorphic modification in the adaptive strategies.


Archive | 2011

Role of acetaldehyde in alcohol addiction : current evidence and future perspectives

Carla Cannizzaro; Fulvio Plescia; Silvana Cacace


Archive | 2012

The role of neurosteoids sulphate in a spatial and object recognition learning task

Pierangelo Sardo; Giuseppe Ferraro; Carla Cannizzaro; Fulvio Plescia; Silvana Cacace; Valerio Rizzo


Archive | 2012

Is Acetaldehyde a substance of abuse? Evidence from a free-access, three-bottle choice paradigm

Libero Italo Giannola; Carla Cannizzaro; Viviana De Caro; Silvana Cacace; Flavia Maria Sutera; Anna Brancato


Archive | 2010

Stress occupazionale: correlazione tra livelli di cortisolo, strategie di coping, ansia e depressione in turnisti notturni

Giuseppe Tranchina; Daniele La Barbera; Ernesto Tranchina; Silvana Cacace; Rosaria Valsavoia


Archive | 2009

Pregnenolone sulphate (PREGS) affects spatial learning and memory in two different cognitive tasks in adult rats. Influence of the emotional state.

Carla Cannizzaro; Fulvio Plescia; Silvana Cacace; Marco Barbera; Giovanna Noto; I Di Liberto; Ignazio Barberi

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